Drug Policy Alliance’s Proposed Executive Order on Marijuana Reform: A Model for Presidential Action To Promote Fairness and Public Health

 

The Drug Policy Alliance has created a model executive order to show how the President can take action to reduce the harms caused by marijuana criminalization — such as barriers to securing a job, housing, healthcare, or SNAP food assistance — and advance federal policies that promote health and fairness.

By directing federal agencies to reduce barriers and reexamine existing policies, the President can build a fairer and healthier future for everyone, including people who have been charged with marijuana violations, veterans, small business owners, workers in the marijuana industry, medical marijuana patients, and adult consumers.

The President Can Take Action to Reduce Harms Now 

Most Americans, along with many elected leaders, agree that marijuana criminalization has been a failure. Most Americans want an end to federal marijuana criminalization and support legalizing it for adults 21 and older. They also want fair policies that repair the damage caused by criminalization, improve public health, and are enforced equally. But federal reform has lagged behind.

Although President Biden’s Department of Justice has proposed moving marijuana from Schedule I to Schedule III under the Controlled Substances Act, this change wouldn’t fully solve the problem. Marijuana would still be illegal under federal law, meaning people could still face arrest and be denied housing, jobs, health care, and other essential services.

States have made progress over the years with policies that focus on decriminalizing, legalizing, and regulating marijuana, but federal action is needed to protect and build on these efforts.

While fully achieving these goals at the federal level will require the passage of comprehensive marijuana laws like the Marijuana Opportunity Reinvestment and Expungement (MORE) Act or the Cannabis Administration and Opportunity Act (CAOA), the President can take action now to reduce the harms and inequities created by marijuana criminalization and set the stage for future federal marijuana policies that promote fairness and public health.

That’s why we’ve created a model executive order on marijuana reform—to show how the President can take meaningful action now to reduce these harms.

DPA’s proposed executive order would:

These actions would help address some of the real life impacts of marijuana criminalization and move toward fairer policies.

The harms of criminalization, like policies that continue to result in arrests and long criminal sentences and those that block people from housing, jobs, or services for veterans, are too significant to ignore. Taking additional action isn’t just an opportunity for the President —it’s a responsibility.

Summary of DPA’s proposed executive order [PDF]

Full text of DPA’s proposed executive order [PDF]

Frequently asked questions: DPA’s proposed executive order [PDF]

FAQs can also be accessed below

Congressman Blumenauer’s memo calling for executive action on marijuana reform [PDF]

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